Saturday, June 17, 2017

India: Steambath to fuel pre-monsoon storms across New Delhi into next week

June 17,2017, 10:16:40AM,EDT

While New Delhi may have to wait longer than normal for the monsoon
to begin, sweltering air will continue to fuel thunderstorms into next
week.
High temperatures in New Delhi were held to near 35 C (95 F)
on Friday after showers and thunderstorms rolled through Thursday night
into Friday morning.
Similar days are shaping up for the region into next week as showers and thunderstorms are set to roll through daily.

On the days that the storminess holds
off until the afternoon, temperatures may still climb to 38-39 C (lower
100s F). Temperatures will be held closer to Friday’s high on the days
that start with lingering clouds and/or showers and thunderstorms.
While
the turn to unsettled weather will hold actual high temperatures back
and bring brief temperature drops during the day, sweltering humidity
may still create even higher AccuWeather RealFeel® Temperatures.
Residents
will have to continue to take the necessary precautions to keep cool
and not to overexert themselves during strenuous activities.
A
surge in even higher humidity early next week may cause the
thunderstorms to become heavier with an increased risk in localized
flash flooding.
The unsettled weather pattern unfolding across northwestern India is not the result of the advancing monsoon.
In
fact, AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Jason Nicholls expects the
monsoon rain over southern and northeastern India to fail to make much
more progress over the rest of the country the next several days.RELATED:India weather centerDetailed forecast for New Delhi What is a monsoon?
"While the monsoon has made steady
advancement in the past couple of weeks, that will change this weekend
and into next week," AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Jason Nicholls
said.
"The monsoon from the Arabian Sea may advance very little
into central India well into next week," he said. "However, there are
signs that the monsoon from the Bay of Bengal may start to make more
progress into north-central India later next week."
In either
case, Nicholls does not expect the monsoon to reach New Delhi until
early July. The typical onset of the monsoon in the National Capital
Region is by July.
Monsoonal rain will continue to stream into
northeastern India and Bangladesh well into next week, threatening to
trigger more mudslides and flash flooding.
The region is still recovering from the devastating mudslides that killed more than 150 people earlier this week.

One of the hardest-hit regions is in eastern Bangladesh, including Chittagong and the Rangamati Hill District.
At least 5,000 homes were destroyed or damaged in Rangamati, according to the Associated Press.